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Switzerland's lower house of parliament on Tuesday narrowly approved a draft bill on a nationwide burqa ban, the ATS news agency reported, but the measure remains far from coming into force.

The proposal by lawmaker Walter Wobmann of the populist right-wing Swiss People's Party (SVP) won 88 votes, with 87 against.

Wobmann's bill was nearly identical to a measure approved in a 2013 referendum in the Italian-speaking canton of Ticino banning the full face Islamic veil.

The Ticino ban came into force on July 1st, and calls for fines ranging from 100 to 10,000 francs.

ATS quoted Wobmann as saying that the goal of the national burqa ban was to "maintain public order and respect for the dignity of women."

Tuesday's vote may prove to be a largely symbolic move in the protracted process towards an outright ban on the full face veil.

Lawmakers will almost certainly defer action on the issue until the country weighs in through a referendum, ATS said.

An initiative has been launched to collect the 100,000 signatures needed to hold a public vote on a burqa ban.

Polls say Swiss voters overwhelmingly support a ban, but a vote could still be two years away.

Even if the ban is endorsed through a referendum, Switzerland's government would still need to draw up a law proposal, which would then be subject to a final parliamentary approval.

Tuesday's vote came as countries across Europe confront tough debates over the role of individual religious liberties, amid rising anti-Islam sentiment that has partly been fuelled by immigration.

France was this summer embroiled in a row over bans on the burkini, a full-body Islamic swimsuit, in resorts around the Riviera.

A poll published earlier this month showed Britons are strongly in favour of a burqa ban.

Switzerland's population of eight million includes an estimated 350,000 Muslims.

The alpine nation has seen a number of high-profile disputes involving its Muslim minority, including fines slapped on parents who refused to allow their daughters to take part in swimming lessons, and a case where male students refused to shake the hands of their female teachers.